US Can't Print More Money... Printing Presses are Broken

As a metaphor for the US troubled economic and financial era -- and the government's stumbling response -- this one's hard to beat. You can't
stimulate the economy via the money supply, after all, if you can't print the money correctly.

Because of a problem with the presses, the federal government has shut down production of its flashy new $100 bills, and has quarantined more than 1
billion of them -- more than 10 percent of all existing U.S. cash -- in a vault in Fort Worth, Texas, reports CNBC.

This is simply comedic. Just as they have begun to warm up the printing presses they decide to stop working due to how much is required to create the
flashy new $100 dollar bills. Maybe this could be a metaphor for what is occurring in our economy, a message of sorts warning ‘Do not continue past
this point’. Maybe it is just my suspicions getting the best of me within the confines of my imagination.

What is more hilarious is that will take one year to sort out and fix but in the meantime this won’t stop them from mass production of currency
backed with virtually nothing except debt. Poor Timothy Geithner won’t even his signature on this money now as it will be reverted back to the
signature of Henry Paulson.

Interesting, these new bills were supposed to contain a new set of hidden pictures and symbols of the next stage of the implementation of the
Illuminati NWO Agenda. Could this be a sign a spanner has been thrown in the works of the NWO? I hope so.

I saw this earlier in the day and was thinking of doing a thread on it but didn't have the time. I'm glad that somebody did. Really, it's funny.
They've been printing what amounts to monopoly money and all of a sudden, they have problems with the presses because the new bills they designed to
thwart counterfeiters are too advanced for their machines.
The whole situation of printing more money to stimulate the economy reminds me of a story that I read by F. Paul Wilson. I don't recall the title at
the moment but it had to do with World War 2. It took place in Germany. The country was facing financial collapse, partly due to fines they had to pay
off from the first world war. The government's solution was to keep printing money. More and more money was being flooding into the market and their
currency was becoming more and more worthless. One of the characters talked the other into selling off all the currency he had (which was basically
worthless) and buying American dollars (which at the time were going strong). At any rate, thanks for posting this.

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